Everybody else didn't say anything, and that included Capital One, and WellsFargo, and B of A. Rob Rubin:. Doesn't it feel like if you say something, it's like... Alex Jimenez:. It's a double-edged sword, I'm sure. Rob Rubin:. If you say something, maybe you have a problem. Tiffani Montez:.
All of a sudden, you've got 100 bucks in your, I don't know, WellsFargo account and you're like, "I don't care how it got there. That's mine now." Anyway, let's start with Paul. Paul, round one. Let's go. "37% of customers dislike targeted ads because they could potentially end up infringing on their privacy reports sort list.
WellsFargo analyst, Steven Cahall thinks the service could break even if approximately 6 million subscribers signed up at $40 a month, and other analysts have the price at closer to 50 bucks a month or higher, but it depends on so many things, estimated signups, the rising cost of sports rights, et cetera. Oscar. Ethan Cramer-Flood:. It's always going to have ads.